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March 9, 2008 - ACC Tournament, Greensboro, NC

Heels Take Fourth Straight Title, 86-73

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Game Recap by Rob Clough

The UNC Tar Heels won their fourth straight ACC title at Duke's expense, but it was through no fault of effort on the part of the Devils. Indeed, it was a tight contest throughout most of the first half, and the Heels didn't really put the game away permanently until the game's final minutes. Both teams seemed fatigued and made a lot of tired-looking mistakes and took tired-looking shots. The difference here was that the Heels were not only better conditioned-seeming, but were better at playing through their fatigue and staying aggressive. That aggressiveness (and some mistakes on Duke's part) helped the Heels dominate on the foul line, hit shots when open and clean up on the offensive boards. Even when Duke made mistakes or seemed out of the game, they never quit hustling or attacking the basket. They played some of their loosest, aggressive basketball when they were down by double figures.

Let's look at the preview points and how Duke did in each of them. Duke's offense didn't do much to keep the Heels off-balance in the first half, but they were able to spring Jasmine Thomas and get her better looks at the basket (especially jumpers from the elbow) in the second. Duke tried more mid-range jumpers than usual, which did help to mix it up a bit, but Chante only took 1 shot away from the basket. In "Be who you are", Duke tried to run some breaks that were too hurried and resulted in turnovers. That folds into "play aggressively, not recklessly", because those plays were reckless gambles that didn't value the ball. Duke was killed in the "don't lose track of the shooters", as starting UNC guards Heather Claytor and Cetera DeGraffenreid combined for 5-9 shooting from three. Those were all created by others, and were wide-open. UNC exploited Duke's matchup zone by passing into the post and then relocating it back out for an open shot--exactly what they had done in their first two meetings with Duke. While Larkins didn't go crazy against Duke, she didn't really have to--she scored and rebounded when needed to, but was pretty much at just a "5" out of "10"--she didn't have to come up with a huge performance.

Another problem was that in their game plan, Duke didn't vary much from past meetings. They came out in their basic zone, mixed it up with some man and then tried several zone variations. There was little trapping or pressing, which was perplexing because DeGraffenreid got in early foul trouble and backup Italee Lucas was clearly uncomfortable making decisions. Rather than try to trap her on the sidelines or double her on every possession, she was mostly left one-on-one. One possible wrinkle could have been a triangle-and-two, with defenders chasing DeGraffenreid and Larkins. That would have been an especially effective defense with shot-happy players like Jessica Breland in the game. Of course, the Heels are a confident, consistent team that might have been able to handle anything Duke was throwing at them, and young DeGraffenreid played magnificently.

Joy Cheek got Duke off to a good start with an early post-up and three, and Wanisha Smith put Duke up 10-6 with a three. In the early going, Duke's offense looked smooth and confident. UNC battled back with open threes by DeGraffenreid, and Claytor. An early sequence saw Smith turn the ball over and Jasmine Thomas foul Heel reserve Trinity Bursey in transition. Duke couldn't take advantage of several UNC turnovers and missed shots until Bursey missed a three and Keturah Jackson found a streaking Waner in transition to cut the lead to 16-14. Krystal Thomas stuck back a Cheek miss to make it 18-16, but the Heels went on a 6-0 run to open up some breathing room. UNC's inside game went to work here, as Pringle scored, rebounded and blocked a shot, while Larkins stuck back a DeGraffenreid miss. Rashanda McCants put the Heels up by 9, but Thomas relocated out to Waner for a crucial three that cut the lead to 27-21.

Chante Black kept Duke close with 4 straight free throws to scale the lead back to 4 and DeGraffenreid went out of the game with her 3rd foul. The Heels got easy looks to push the lead to 7, but Black & Karima Christmas kept attacking and getting to the line. A foul shot by Christmas made it 35-31 with 3:41. Duke used some aggressive trapping on an inbounds play and Waner stepped in front of a Bursey pass. As she had the ball, she was falling out of bounds and tried to call a timeout. When it wasn't granted and the ball was turned over, she slammed it to the floor in front of the ref and was whistled for a technical. She was immediately taken out of the game and didn't return until the final seconds of the half, despite this being her first foul. As a result, and due in part to foul trouble, Duke's lineup in the last 3:30 of the half were the three freshmen (Thomas, Thomas and Christmas), Keturah Jackson and Carrem Gay. This group is not exactly an offensively-oriented lineup, and the results were predictable: a 6-2 UNC run to end the half. This was despite 2 turnovers and 3 misses by the Heels--the opportunities were there, but this young Duke lineup turned the ball over three times. They did give it their all, especially the ever-hustling Christmas, but the Devils didn't have the firepower to make a real dent. UNC led 41-33 at the half and had huge edges in points off turnovers and second-chance points (12-3 and 13-2, respectively).

Larkins helped boost the Heels to a quick 12 point lead in th second half, but the rested starters for Duke led a comeback. It started with a Cheek basket over two bigger players, a rebound and another basket by Cheek on a feed from Smith. Nish then sank a jumper to cut it to 6 and McCants took a tough shot. Black grabbed the board and Waner delivered a nice pass that Chante adjusted to and used a hesitation move to score on. Five minutes into the half, and Duke had cut the score to 47-43. On Duke's next possession, the sagging defense allowed Clayton a wide-open shot on a relocation pass from McCants. That energized the slumping Heels and kicked off a 9-0 run that kept Duke at arm's length the rest of the game. Breland and DeGraffenreid both hit a pair of free throws and Pringle got a big stickback to make it 56-43.

Duke didn't give up, as Black had another basket and Jasmine Thomas sank two short jumpers. Krystal Thomas had a nifty stickback to make it 9, but the Heels converted from the foul line and threes from Lucas and DeGraffenreid pushed the lead up to 16. Once again, the Devils regrouped. The Heels got sloppy and distracted again, thinking the game over, while Smith, Waner and J.Thomas all scored. That second score from Jasmine came after a tremendous block on DeGraffenreid and cut the lead to 8 with four minutes to go. Over the next couple of minutes, Waner and Thomas missed threes that could have cut the lead to 7, and the Heels were never threatened again. Larkins was deservedly named the tournament MVP, while Waner made first team and Smith & Cheek made second team all-tournament. The players have to be heartened that they were able to compete so strongly against teams that had handled them with ease in the regular season, and should use that feeling to boost their confidence for the postseason.


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